Gold On the Verge of Tearing Up Resistance

Don’t get overly bullish yet. What we’re waiting for is the “all clear” signal, which is just 1% or so away from us.

What Wealth Research Group is also keeping an eye on is the sentiment. If gold’s price is rising while demand is soaring then the banking giants smack the price around and scare off the weak hands, but this isn’t happening now.

Remember these 3 elements that I’m about to show you and stick to them – don’t ever deviate from them.

For an investment opportunity in commodities to work out for you in the most profitable way, you must be ready when an asset is hated, cheap, and in an uptrend.

1. Hated: Middle-class America has abandoned gold and silver. Not only are the sales severely down, but on Google Trends, Bitcoin and Ethereum have surpassed the search quantity of the metals.

In fact, bond investors are betting on low interest rates at a record pace. This is a deflationary theme, and we all know that investor sentiment is a brilliant contrarian indicator.

Bond investors are more confident that lower rates are here to stay than they have been for 35 years.

But as we’ve seen many times before, especially under the fiat monetary system, inflation picks up speed without warning and very quickly.

2. Cheap: What’s important to do is to compare gold’s price today with its 1980 high using the same CPI formula – the U.S. Government has altered the components of the Consumer Price Index over the years to make inflation appear much less harmful than it is.

In 2011, gold was as high as it was a third of the way through the 1970s cycle, which means that rising to a price of $5,700 per ounce could be expected. Gold is cheap.

3. Uptrend: This was certainly missing for a long period, but the metal just snapped out of its 2011 resistance line. Chief technical analyst for Goldman Sachs, Sheba Jafari, has come out today with a report that sees gold reaching $1,304-$1,315.

This is a huge confirmation that the gold bears are losing again.

Don’t be committing the fatal error of jumping the gun, though. Let’s make sure this isn’t a false alarm – $1,300 is our key for seeing this through.

<

2016’s 180% move higher was extremely brief and is not considered a bull market in itself, but merely the first act.

The swift 8-month bullish roar is not the typical length of a bull market.

It was merely a correction within the long-term bear market that started in 2011.

Gold has had to shake off deflationary fears, a strong USD, the weakness of the BRIC countries that are interconnected with gold, the price suppression by the big banks that is now out in the open, and low oil prices.

The mining shares have been even more brutal, as they’ve punished nearly all bulls since August of 2016 – almost a year of massacre.

Gold is mimicking the 1970s move, and it has a lot more room to go.

In terms of coverage of the currency supply, gold is at an all-time low. Less than 7% of the U.S. currency supply is backed.

With regards to the miners, gold ripping through the $1,300 mark would signal that they can begin spending more on acquisitions, drilling, merging, and expanding.

This will be the next logical step, as their financial health is firmly in place.

Their books are looking solid.

The next step is that the same investors who have been shorting the stocks as a means of a hedge for years will now be reversing course.

As you can see, for more than 6 years, traditional investments have outperformed the riskier miners.

We’ve curved the bottom on that as well.

I want you to watch your favorite stocks in the coming days. When you see the volume that is being traded rise substantially, that signals that the buyers are back.